To consider the life of Korla Pandit-and that's what I will call him because that is who he became-is to consider the weight of wearing a mask for 50 years. It is to grasp the fear of exposure, of a revelation that would have killed his career. One slip and he would have gone from being a mirror of white America's mania for things "exotic" to somebody white America didn't want to face. He would have been revealed as a fraud, and his fans would have never forgiven him. It is to recognize how he had to cut himself off from a black community that he'd grown up in, from a culture that had shaped the musical skills, and the survival skills, that he drew on for the rest of his life.

This paper presents work with a biracial young woman, in the context of a predominantly white Jungian training organisation. The patient’s relational difficulties and her struggle to integrate different aspects of her personality are understood in terms of the overlapping influences of developmental trauma, transgenerational trauma relating to the legacy of slavery in the Caribbean, conflictual racial identities, internalised racism, and the British black/white racial cultural complex. The author presents her understanding of an unfolding dynamic in the analytic relationship in which the black slave/white master schema was apparently reversed between them, with the white analyst becoming subservient to the black patient. The paper tracks the process through which trust was built alongside the development of this joint defence against intimacy â which eventually had to be relinquished by both partners in the dyad. A white on black ârescue fantasyâ, identified by the patient as a selfâserving part of her father’s personality, is explored in relation to the analytic relationship and the training context.